Free ACCA Mock Test 102 — 20 Questions + Full Answers
Association of Chartered Certified Accountants · Accountancy students · Exams: Mar, Jun, Sep, Dec
Sections: Financial Accounting · Applaa proprietary paper — free to download and print
No sign-up required · 100% free · Applaa proprietary content
Applaa ACCA Mock Test 102
applaa-acca-mock-102.pdf · 20 questions
Applaa proprietary content · Free to download and print · No sign-up required
Save PDFSample Questions — ACCA Mock 102
8 of 20 shownCorrect answers highlighted in green. Full explanations included.
Before correcting the year-end errors, the draft profit of Crest Hotels Ltd was £120,000. An error was discovered: Closing inventory was overstated by £15,000. What is the revised profit after correcting this error?
- A.£135,000
- B.£105,000
- C.£120,000 (no effect on profit)
- D.£90,000
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Impact of Inventory Errors on Profit The relationship between inventory and profit is one of the most important concepts in financial accounting. Closing inventory is deducted from Cost of Sales. If closing inventory is overstated, Cost of Sales is *understated*, which means Gross Profit is *overstated*. Correcting the overstatement increases COGS and reduces profit. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Recall the COGS Formula: Cost of Sales = Opening Inventory + Purchases Closing Invent
Before correcting the year-end errors, the draft profit of Summit Manufacturing Ltd was £120,000. An error was discovered: Closing inventory was overstated by £1,200. What is the revised profit after correcting this error?
- A.£121,200
- B.£118,800
- C.£120,000 (no effect on profit)
- D.£117,600
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Impact of Inventory Errors on Profit The relationship between inventory and profit is one of the most important concepts in financial accounting. Closing inventory is deducted from Cost of Sales. If closing inventory is overstated, Cost of Sales is *understated*, which means Gross Profit is *overstated*. Correcting the overstatement increases COGS and reduces profit. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Recall the COGS Formula: Cost of Sales = Opening Inventory + Purchases Closing Invent
For the last quarter, Atlas Transport Ltd had net credit sales of £140,000 (excluding VAT). Gross purchases inclusive of 20% VAT were £84,000. What is the net VAT amount payable to (or reclaimable from) the tax authority?
- A.£14,000 Payable
- B.£14,000 Reclaimable
- C.£28,000 Payable
- D.£11,200 Payable
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: VAT Return - Output VAT vs. Input VAT A VAT-registered business acts as a tax collector for HMRC. It charges Output VAT on sales and reclaims Input VAT on purchases. The *net VAT payable* is the difference: Output VAT Input VAT. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Calculate Output VAT (tax charged to customers on sales): - Sales are NET (exc. VAT): £140,000 × 20% = £28,000 2. Calculate Input VAT (tax paid to suppliers on purchases): - Purchases are GROSS (inc. VAT): use VAT fracti
For the year ended 31 December, Pinnacle Consulting Ltd paid rent of £42,000. At the year-end, the company had an outstanding electricity invoice of £3,500 which has not yet been paid. What are the adjusting entries required at the year-end to record this accrual?
- A.Debit Accruals £3,500, Credit Electricity Expense £3,500
- B.Debit Electricity Expense £3,500, Credit Accruals (Liabilities) £3,500
- C.Debit Cash £3,500, Credit Electricity Expense £3,500
- D.Debit Electricity Expense £3,500, Credit Prepayments (Assets) £3,500
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Accruals (Expenses Incurred but Not Yet Paid) Under the accruals concept (IAS 1), expenses must be recognised in the period they are *incurred*, not when they are *paid*. An accrual is a current liability - the business owes this amount but hasn't yet paid the invoice. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify the Issue: The electricity expense of £3,500 was incurred during the accounting year but remains unpaid at year-end. 2. Apply the Accruals Concept: The expense belongs to this ye
Atlas Transport Ltd purchased a motor car for £110,000 inclusive of VAT, for use by a director. The car is used 60% for business travel and 40% for private travel. What is the input VAT recovery rule regarding this vehicle?
- A.Input VAT can be recovered in full (100%).
- B.Input VAT can be recovered at 60% representing the business use portion.
- C.No input VAT can be recovered because input VAT is generally blocked on passenger motor cars unless used exclusively for business (0% recovery).
- D.Input VAT can be recovered in full if the car is leased rather than purchased.
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Input VAT Block on Passenger Motor Cars Under HMRC VAT rules, input VAT on the purchase of a passenger motor car is subject to a 100% block - meaning it is entirely irrecoverable - unless the car is used *exclusively* for business purposes with no possibility of private use. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify the Asset: This is a passenger motor car (not a commercial vehicle like a van or lorry). 2. Apply the VAT Block Rule: If the car is available for any private use, input VAT
A retail store, Zephyr Services LLP, purchased inventories for a gross total of £18,000 inclusive of standard-rate VAT at 20%. What are the net purchase cost and the input VAT amount recoverable by Zephyr Services LLP?
- A.Net Cost: £15,000, VAT Recoverable: £3,000
- B.Net Cost: £18,000, VAT Recoverable: £3,600
- C.Net Cost: £14,400, VAT Recoverable: £3,600
- D.Net Cost: £15,000, VAT Recoverable: £0 (VAT is non-recoverable on inventories)
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Extracting VAT from a VAT-Inclusive (Gross) Price When a price is VAT-inclusive, you must use the VAT fraction to extract the tax element. You cannot simply multiply the gross price by 20% - that would over-calculate the VAT because you would be applying the rate to an amount that already contains VAT. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify the Problem: The gross (VAT-inclusive) price is £18,000. Standard rate VAT = 20%. 2. Apply the VAT Fraction: Net = Gross ÷ (1 + VAT rate) = £18,
At 31 March, the bank statement of Swift Logistics Ltd shows a credit balance of £28,800. Unpresented checks total £7,200, and outstanding uncleared lodgements total £3,600. What is the reconciled balance that should appear in Swift Logistics Ltd's cash book?
- A.£25,200
- B.£32,400
- C.£39,600
- D.£18,000
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Bank Reconciliation Statement A bank reconciliation explains the difference between the *cash book balance* (company's records) and the *bank statement balance* (bank's records). Timing differences - unpresented cheques and uncleared lodgements - cause these differences. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Start with Bank Statement Balance: £28,800 (credit balance, meaning the bank shows this as a positive balance for the company). 2. Add Uncleared Lodgements: Deposits sent by Swift Logis
At 31 March, the bank statement of Falcon Engineering Ltd shows a credit balance of £16,800. Unpresented checks total £4,200, and outstanding uncleared lodgements total £2,100. What is the reconciled balance that should appear in Falcon Engineering Ltd's cash book?
- A.£14,700
- B.£18,900
- C.£23,100
- D.£10,500
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Bank Reconciliation Statement A bank reconciliation explains the difference between the *cash book balance* (company's records) and the *bank statement balance* (bank's records). Timing differences - unpresented cheques and uncleared lodgements - cause these differences. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Start with Bank Statement Balance: £16,800 (credit balance, meaning the bank shows this as a positive balance for the company). 2. Add Uncleared Lodgements: Deposits sent by Falcon Engi
Download the PDF for all 20 questions + full mark scheme
Download PDFFrequently Asked Questions
Is this ACCA mock test free?+
Yes. All 250 Applaa ACCA mock tests are completely free — no sign-up, no payment required. Download PDF or view in browser.
Which ACCA papers do these mocks cover?+
Applaa ACCA mock tests cover F1 (Accounts Preparation) and F2 (Management Accounting) — the Applied Knowledge level papers, formerly known as BT and MA.
Do the ACCA mock papers include worked explanations?+
Yes. Every ACCA practice question on this page includes the correct answer and a worked explanation explaining why each option is right or wrong.
How many questions are in each ACCA mock test?+
Each Applaa ACCA mock test contains 20 multiple-choice questions across the F1 and F2 syllabus areas, with full worked explanations.
Download This Mock
Free PDF — 20 questions with worked answers. Print it or attempt offline.
Download PDF FreeNo sign-up · No paywall · Applaa proprietary
Paper Info
- Exam
- ACCA
- Mock number
- 102 of 250
- Questions
- 20
- Format
- Multiple Choice (MCQ)
- Sections
- 1
- Audience
- Accountancy students
- Timing
- Exams: Mar, Jun, Sep, Dec
- Copyright
- Applaa Proprietary
Sections Covered
- Financial Accounting
AI step-by-step guidance
Appy Buddy in the Applaa desktop app guides you through every question with Socratic AI tutoring — explains why each answer is right or wrong.
Download Applaa Free